[2] İnan, however, misreads Jones (p. 292), who points to the horizontal stroke after the final nu of Ἀντωνεῖνον, and speculates that the inscription may not be complete. If, on the other hand, the inscription is complete, Ἀντωνεῖνον could refer to a number of emperors according to Jones. Jones does not, as İnan's implies, speculate on that horizontal line possibly belonging to an Omega, and Ἀντωνεῖνον therefore being in fact the genitiv plural Ἀντωνείνων (İnan p. 224). Concerning the statue of Commodus, İnan p. 224 writes that it was the largest of all (a torso of 1,40 m without the head), but the torso most likely to have represented Septimius Severus was much larger: a torso of 2,165 m and a head of 0,49 m. See İnan p. 226 ("wahrlich kolossal").